Saturday, February 28, 2009
GOVERNMENT GONE WILD
What would you think if, in the city or town where you live, no one employed more people than your local government? Chances are that sounds a little far-fetched but maybe not impossible in some towns without a major employer.
What if, in the county where you live, the county was the biggest employer? That sounds pretty unlikely, eh?
What if, in the state where you live, the state was the biggest employer? Again, pretty unlikely.
Now, what if the average annual salary of those government workers was $67,000? And what if, with benefits, the total average package was more than $106,000?
What I just described to you is not your local, county, or state government. It is your federal government -- the biggest employer in the entire country.
For all the flack that "big business" automotive producers, brokerage houses, and banks have gotten for having too many employees and paying them all too much ... for all the citations of greed and corruption ... for all the claims that this is what led to their downfall ...
does it seem correct or necessary to have a federal government that all by itself is our biggest employer -- at an average salary that makes most of us salivate ... and then have that government voting to make itself bigger ...
does this seem wise ... does it seem sustainable?
Did it work for the auto manufacturers, brokerage houses, and banks?
Something to think about?
What if, in the county where you live, the county was the biggest employer? That sounds pretty unlikely, eh?
What if, in the state where you live, the state was the biggest employer? Again, pretty unlikely.
Now, what if the average annual salary of those government workers was $67,000? And what if, with benefits, the total average package was more than $106,000?
What I just described to you is not your local, county, or state government. It is your federal government -- the biggest employer in the entire country.
For all the flack that "big business" automotive producers, brokerage houses, and banks have gotten for having too many employees and paying them all too much ... for all the citations of greed and corruption ... for all the claims that this is what led to their downfall ...
does it seem correct or necessary to have a federal government that all by itself is our biggest employer -- at an average salary that makes most of us salivate ... and then have that government voting to make itself bigger ...
does this seem wise ... does it seem sustainable?
Did it work for the auto manufacturers, brokerage houses, and banks?
Something to think about?
Wednesday, February 25, 2009
FRUITFUL SUFFERING
The following was written by Os Hillman.
..."It is because God has made me fruitful in the land of my suffering." - Genesis 41:52
Joseph named his second son Ephraim. Ephraim was given to him after he had been delivered from his suffering of 13 years. Joseph said that he named him this because God had made him fruitful in the land of his suffering. Ephraim means "twice fruitful."
Joseph was fruitful in two instances. He was fruitful during his time of adversity and in his prosperity. When God brings us into a time of suffering, it can be a fruitful time. It's rare for us to see the fruit during the suffering period. But know that the roots are going deep into the spiritual soil of our soul because of our pressing in to God during our time of suffering. This is producing a work in our character that cannot be seen until it finishes the process. Such was the case for Joseph.
It was not until several years after such a time of suffering that I began to see the fruit of the trials that the Lord allowed me to experience. How grateful I am to understand some of the "why" that has led to a new life in Him that I would never have had without this period.
Samson had great anointing but lacked character. We see many today who have great anointing yet lack character. But God is rising up Josephs who not only have great anointing for these days but also great character. Suffering produces character.
If you find yourself in a time of suffering, now is the time to press into God. Let your roots grow deeper. Whenever there is a famine, tree roots are forced to drive deeper into the soil to find water. These times are designed to create such a deep-rooted faith that our natures will be changed forever.
..."It is because God has made me fruitful in the land of my suffering." - Genesis 41:52
Joseph named his second son Ephraim. Ephraim was given to him after he had been delivered from his suffering of 13 years. Joseph said that he named him this because God had made him fruitful in the land of his suffering. Ephraim means "twice fruitful."
Joseph was fruitful in two instances. He was fruitful during his time of adversity and in his prosperity. When God brings us into a time of suffering, it can be a fruitful time. It's rare for us to see the fruit during the suffering period. But know that the roots are going deep into the spiritual soil of our soul because of our pressing in to God during our time of suffering. This is producing a work in our character that cannot be seen until it finishes the process. Such was the case for Joseph.
It was not until several years after such a time of suffering that I began to see the fruit of the trials that the Lord allowed me to experience. How grateful I am to understand some of the "why" that has led to a new life in Him that I would never have had without this period.
Samson had great anointing but lacked character. We see many today who have great anointing yet lack character. But God is rising up Josephs who not only have great anointing for these days but also great character. Suffering produces character.
If you find yourself in a time of suffering, now is the time to press into God. Let your roots grow deeper. Whenever there is a famine, tree roots are forced to drive deeper into the soil to find water. These times are designed to create such a deep-rooted faith that our natures will be changed forever.
Saturday, February 21, 2009
HIGH IMPACT TEAMS
Following is something I put together for a meeting of church leaders. However, the attributes of effective teams pointed out in this article and as put forth by the apostle Paul all apply to secular teams as well.
So, imagine yourself as Paul sitting in prison in Rome. Not exactly sure what’s going to happen to you … planning your appeal. You’re thinking back to a few years earlier when you’d spent three years and a couple of trips building a church of Christ followers in Ephesus. You’d followed God’s instruction as He carefully timed your visits to that city. Ephesus was a Greek city located in part of what we now call Turkey. You’d learned to love the people there. While you were there, you got embroiled in a dispute with the local silversmiths because they wanted to keep making little statues of Artemis and her temple. She was a goddess that the locals worshipped, the goddess of the forest and the hills, of virginity, fertility and childbirth. She carried around a bow and arrow. I’m not quite sure what role those played in childbirth but she had them. The locals liked her – those were all good things that they attributed to her. But God blessed your ministry, built up a team of believers … and now you’re in prison in Rome.
What do you do? You want to see God’s work continue to grow in Ephesus … you want to see the city continue to be transformed. You want to see all those silversmiths have to find a different line of work. You want to see them have to start making little silver Jesus statues that people put on the dashboards of their chariots. You remember the team you left behind there. These were people you’d baptized. They’d seen you heal people and cast out demons. But certainly they’d heard that you were now in prison. What were they going to do? Would they keep the faith? Would they keep things going?
You were the leader of their team … and now you’re miles and miles away in prison. Too far for them to visit regularly … no phone calls. All you can do is write them a letter … so what are you going to put in your letter? I mean, talk about a team in transition – this is the ultimate example of that! Paul really had to wonder what he could do to encourage these folks. What would you do in this situation? Well, undoubtedly you’re going to try to inspire your team … and you’re going to give them your best stuff about how they can work together to be an effective team. You’re going to pull out all the stops.
In this case, the letter Paul wrote was such an important one that it is called an “epistle” which means basically that it was meant to teach others – to provide instruction. Of course, we know it as the book of Ephesians. Let’s take a look at what Paul said, starting in Chapter 4 and see what advice he is giving them on how to work as a team. I’m using The Message translation.
1-3In light of all this, here's what I want you to do. While I'm locked up here, a prisoner for the Master, I want you to get out there and walk—better yet, run!—on the road God called you to travel. I don't want any of you sitting around on your hands. I don't want anyone strolling off, down some path that goes nowhere.
What do you hear in there? Urgency and purposefulness – don’t sit around on your hands – get out there and make things happen! Paul is conveying to his team in Ephesus just how important what they’re doing is. Dan was telling me about a podcast that Andy Stanley has out on high performance teams and one of the big points Stanley makes is the importance of passion – the team has to be passionate about what they’re doing. And what causes passion? A clearly defined problem. In this case, Paul’s problem was that he knew that continuing to overtake Artemis and build a church of Jesus followers in Ephesus was an uphill battle. Their problem was that they could not lose momentum. They had to have passion … they had to have clear direction … and they had to keep moving … they had to make things happen. If they didn’t, no one else would! If they suddenly thought the problem was solved, then the team would fall apart and Artemis with her bow and arrow would win. Think about your team a bit – what is it that you’re really called to do? What will the ramifications be if you’re not successful? How do you keep that message continually in front of your team so that, even if like in Paul’s case, you’re locked up in jail, the good work goes on.
And mark that you do this with humility and discipline—not in fits and starts, but steadily, pouring yourselves out for each other in acts of love, alert at noticing differences and quick at mending fences.
Wow. What do we see in there? I see humility and discipline. The King James version says “with all lowliness and gentleness, with long-suffering, bearing with one another in love, endeavoring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace” Seems to me he’s telling them that they need to be filled with the Fruits of the Spirit – those things Chuck talked about a couple of weeks ago. Love, joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance. They needed to be filled with the Spirit and act from the Spirit. Paul is also saying that this whole thing they were trying to do was far bigger than any of them individually. As a result, they needed to keep the big picture focus and be willing to give their “selves” up a bit – be willing to pour themselves out for each other because building a church and defeating the chick with her bow and arrow was far bigger than any one of them individually. How do the members of your team need to support and encourage one another? What happens when they don’t? Things can sometimes go downhill pretty quickly when a team stops supporting each other.
4-6You were all called to travel on the same road and in the same direction, so stay together, both outwardly and inwardly. You have one Master, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all, who rules over all, works through all, and is present in all. Everything you are and think and do is permeated with Oneness.
This probably sounds pretty familiar to those of you who went through the Team Leadership class we had a couple of years ago because what Paul is talking about here is alignment. Spiritual alignment certainly but there are other types of alignment as well – philosophical, organizational, and methodological. Members of an effective team really need to be all on board with one another in these areas. In the podcast Dan was telling me about, Andy Stanley talks about how a team must all be around an agreed-upon solution to the pressing problem at hand. Teams must be willing to hear out each others thoughts on the subject and reach a point where you’re not all just going along with the actions of the team but they’re really committed to them. If your team is having issues with alignment, then re-visiting things like your Mission and the problem you’re solving can help to get everyone onto God’s agenda. Having that prayer cell going to undergird your ministry that we have talked about will also help to ensure and protect alignment. Sometimes with spiritual alignment, team members need to evaluate where they are on their individual faith journeys. A component of that is appropriate accountability which we will talk about in a bit. If your team is having issues with philosophical, organizational, or methodological alignment, some good healthy discussion within your team may be called for … a great resource for learning how to do that is some of the books written by Patrick Lencioni. He doesn’t let things be swept under the rug to fester but instead encourages teams to get things out in the open for healthy and productive discussion. In order to have those discussions, though, you must build trust within your team and that comes greatly as a result of spiritual alignment – all clearly being under one banner. This comes through open sharing and respect for the big picture – making sure that your team members are all off of their own individual agendas and onto God’s agenda.
7-13But that doesn't mean you should all look and speak and act the same. Out of the generosity of Christ, each of us is given his own gift. The text for this is,
He climbed the high mountain,
He captured the enemy and seized the booty,
He handed it all out in gifts to the people.
Is it not true that the One who climbed up also climbed down, down to the valley of earth? And the One who climbed down is the One who climbed back up, up to highest heaven. He handed out gifts above and below, filled heaven with his gifts, filled earth with his gifts. He handed out gifts of apostle, prophet, evangelist, and pastor-teacher to train Christ's followers in skilled servant work, working within Christ's body, the church, until we're all moving rhythmically and easily with each other, efficient and graceful in response to God's Son, fully mature adults, fully developed within and without, fully alive like Christ.
Okay, in his podcast, Andy Stanley calls this “clearly defined roles” and having a sense of interdependency between members of the team. Did you notice how Paul talked about this, though? He talks about how God climbed down and climbed back up … how He humbled Himself to reach out to us. Just like how we are called to humble ourselves to others when we work within the roles in which God has placed us. We give up ourselves to serve Him. Once all members of a team have done that, then they can begin to work together rhythmically and easily, efficient and graceful. The way Paul writes this is also kind of interesting because he isn’t really phrasing it to say that God simply gives some people the gift of being an apostle or a prophet or an evangelist or a pastor-teacher. No, He’s far more involved than that. Instead, as Paul points out, God actually sends our team individuals with each of those talents and skills to work within the body of Christ. God had your team planned way before you ever thought of it! He knew exactly who He was going to send to you to play those various roles. That’s a little humbling in and of itself, isn’t it?
There used to be a Quaker theologian by the name of Elton Trueblood. He died a few years back but, when he was in his mid 80s he spoke at my college graduation. I wish I would have paid attention to him because now I keep running across things he wrote. One of those, though, was that “The Reformation opened the Bible to the common man; a new Reformation will open up ministry to the common man.” When Paul talked about God sending our teams people specifically as evangelists and preachers and teachers and things, he wasn’t talking only about professional clergy … he was talking about you, about me, about all of our team members. He has roles for all of us to play and He’s brought us together specifically to live into those roles.
Another thing we talked about back in our Team Leadership class was about how, on a well functioning team, all members of the team are leaders really. How they all have particular roles to play, are interdependent on each other, and will all be leaders in their own way. God has sent your team the right people – part of your job is to make sure those roles are defined, and everyone is aware of them, so that your team works together harmoniously. Having problems with your team working together? Oftentimes that is because roles have not been clearly defined.
14-16No prolonged infancies among us, please. We'll not tolerate babes in the woods, small children who are an easy mark for impostors. God wants us to grow up, to know the whole truth and tell it in love—like Christ in everything. We take our lead from Christ, who is the source of everything we do. He keeps us in step with each other. His very breath and blood flow through us, nourishing us so that we will grow up healthy in God, robust in love.
People who read my FaceBook page will probably say that I need to pay some serious attention to Paul’s admonition here to grow up but isn’t this great? “We take our lead from Christ, who is the source of everything we do.” Christ is the head of the body – He is who we all are to follow. This is Spiritual Alignment, yes, but I believe that a healthy part of this is appropriate accountability. We’re all on journeys here to follow Christ as the head of the body. We need to respect and appreciate that. And part of that is allowing ourselves to be mentored and held accountable in healthy ways. We have talked a lot about mentoring and discipling in the past. Being willing to really lay yourself humble to another and asking them to hold you accountable is a huge thing. But it is part of living the Spirit-filled life. Members of an effective and healthy team will have the trust and willingness for two-way sharing of their journeys … supporting and encouraging one another … no longer being babes in the woods but being mature Christians knowing the whole truth and telling it in love. Working together to grow up healthy in God, robust in love.
Wow … there’s so much in Ephesians 4 about healthy and high performing teams … I am sure I have barely touched on what all Paul was trying to convey but let’s summarize and look at the attributes of a high performance team that we have talked about.
1) Urgency and Purposefulness – A clearly defined problem. What captures and holds your team’s passion?
a. Able to hold a team together
2) Humility and Discipline – Pursuing the “big” picture instead of one’s own interests.
3) Alignment – Spiritual, Philosophical, Organizational and Methodological
a. Prayer Cell, Trust, Open Discussion
4) Clearly Defined Roles and Interdependency
a. Everyone is a leader
5) Healthy and Appropriate Accountability
a. Mentoring and Discipling
b. Personal Spiritual Journey Plan
c. Following Christ as the head of the Body
So, imagine yourself as Paul sitting in prison in Rome. Not exactly sure what’s going to happen to you … planning your appeal. You’re thinking back to a few years earlier when you’d spent three years and a couple of trips building a church of Christ followers in Ephesus. You’d followed God’s instruction as He carefully timed your visits to that city. Ephesus was a Greek city located in part of what we now call Turkey. You’d learned to love the people there. While you were there, you got embroiled in a dispute with the local silversmiths because they wanted to keep making little statues of Artemis and her temple. She was a goddess that the locals worshipped, the goddess of the forest and the hills, of virginity, fertility and childbirth. She carried around a bow and arrow. I’m not quite sure what role those played in childbirth but she had them. The locals liked her – those were all good things that they attributed to her. But God blessed your ministry, built up a team of believers … and now you’re in prison in Rome.
What do you do? You want to see God’s work continue to grow in Ephesus … you want to see the city continue to be transformed. You want to see all those silversmiths have to find a different line of work. You want to see them have to start making little silver Jesus statues that people put on the dashboards of their chariots. You remember the team you left behind there. These were people you’d baptized. They’d seen you heal people and cast out demons. But certainly they’d heard that you were now in prison. What were they going to do? Would they keep the faith? Would they keep things going?
You were the leader of their team … and now you’re miles and miles away in prison. Too far for them to visit regularly … no phone calls. All you can do is write them a letter … so what are you going to put in your letter? I mean, talk about a team in transition – this is the ultimate example of that! Paul really had to wonder what he could do to encourage these folks. What would you do in this situation? Well, undoubtedly you’re going to try to inspire your team … and you’re going to give them your best stuff about how they can work together to be an effective team. You’re going to pull out all the stops.
In this case, the letter Paul wrote was such an important one that it is called an “epistle” which means basically that it was meant to teach others – to provide instruction. Of course, we know it as the book of Ephesians. Let’s take a look at what Paul said, starting in Chapter 4 and see what advice he is giving them on how to work as a team. I’m using The Message translation.
1-3In light of all this, here's what I want you to do. While I'm locked up here, a prisoner for the Master, I want you to get out there and walk—better yet, run!—on the road God called you to travel. I don't want any of you sitting around on your hands. I don't want anyone strolling off, down some path that goes nowhere.
What do you hear in there? Urgency and purposefulness – don’t sit around on your hands – get out there and make things happen! Paul is conveying to his team in Ephesus just how important what they’re doing is. Dan was telling me about a podcast that Andy Stanley has out on high performance teams and one of the big points Stanley makes is the importance of passion – the team has to be passionate about what they’re doing. And what causes passion? A clearly defined problem. In this case, Paul’s problem was that he knew that continuing to overtake Artemis and build a church of Jesus followers in Ephesus was an uphill battle. Their problem was that they could not lose momentum. They had to have passion … they had to have clear direction … and they had to keep moving … they had to make things happen. If they didn’t, no one else would! If they suddenly thought the problem was solved, then the team would fall apart and Artemis with her bow and arrow would win. Think about your team a bit – what is it that you’re really called to do? What will the ramifications be if you’re not successful? How do you keep that message continually in front of your team so that, even if like in Paul’s case, you’re locked up in jail, the good work goes on.
And mark that you do this with humility and discipline—not in fits and starts, but steadily, pouring yourselves out for each other in acts of love, alert at noticing differences and quick at mending fences.
Wow. What do we see in there? I see humility and discipline. The King James version says “with all lowliness and gentleness, with long-suffering, bearing with one another in love, endeavoring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace” Seems to me he’s telling them that they need to be filled with the Fruits of the Spirit – those things Chuck talked about a couple of weeks ago. Love, joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance. They needed to be filled with the Spirit and act from the Spirit. Paul is also saying that this whole thing they were trying to do was far bigger than any of them individually. As a result, they needed to keep the big picture focus and be willing to give their “selves” up a bit – be willing to pour themselves out for each other because building a church and defeating the chick with her bow and arrow was far bigger than any one of them individually. How do the members of your team need to support and encourage one another? What happens when they don’t? Things can sometimes go downhill pretty quickly when a team stops supporting each other.
4-6You were all called to travel on the same road and in the same direction, so stay together, both outwardly and inwardly. You have one Master, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all, who rules over all, works through all, and is present in all. Everything you are and think and do is permeated with Oneness.
This probably sounds pretty familiar to those of you who went through the Team Leadership class we had a couple of years ago because what Paul is talking about here is alignment. Spiritual alignment certainly but there are other types of alignment as well – philosophical, organizational, and methodological. Members of an effective team really need to be all on board with one another in these areas. In the podcast Dan was telling me about, Andy Stanley talks about how a team must all be around an agreed-upon solution to the pressing problem at hand. Teams must be willing to hear out each others thoughts on the subject and reach a point where you’re not all just going along with the actions of the team but they’re really committed to them. If your team is having issues with alignment, then re-visiting things like your Mission and the problem you’re solving can help to get everyone onto God’s agenda. Having that prayer cell going to undergird your ministry that we have talked about will also help to ensure and protect alignment. Sometimes with spiritual alignment, team members need to evaluate where they are on their individual faith journeys. A component of that is appropriate accountability which we will talk about in a bit. If your team is having issues with philosophical, organizational, or methodological alignment, some good healthy discussion within your team may be called for … a great resource for learning how to do that is some of the books written by Patrick Lencioni. He doesn’t let things be swept under the rug to fester but instead encourages teams to get things out in the open for healthy and productive discussion. In order to have those discussions, though, you must build trust within your team and that comes greatly as a result of spiritual alignment – all clearly being under one banner. This comes through open sharing and respect for the big picture – making sure that your team members are all off of their own individual agendas and onto God’s agenda.
7-13But that doesn't mean you should all look and speak and act the same. Out of the generosity of Christ, each of us is given his own gift. The text for this is,
He climbed the high mountain,
He captured the enemy and seized the booty,
He handed it all out in gifts to the people.
Is it not true that the One who climbed up also climbed down, down to the valley of earth? And the One who climbed down is the One who climbed back up, up to highest heaven. He handed out gifts above and below, filled heaven with his gifts, filled earth with his gifts. He handed out gifts of apostle, prophet, evangelist, and pastor-teacher to train Christ's followers in skilled servant work, working within Christ's body, the church, until we're all moving rhythmically and easily with each other, efficient and graceful in response to God's Son, fully mature adults, fully developed within and without, fully alive like Christ.
Okay, in his podcast, Andy Stanley calls this “clearly defined roles” and having a sense of interdependency between members of the team. Did you notice how Paul talked about this, though? He talks about how God climbed down and climbed back up … how He humbled Himself to reach out to us. Just like how we are called to humble ourselves to others when we work within the roles in which God has placed us. We give up ourselves to serve Him. Once all members of a team have done that, then they can begin to work together rhythmically and easily, efficient and graceful. The way Paul writes this is also kind of interesting because he isn’t really phrasing it to say that God simply gives some people the gift of being an apostle or a prophet or an evangelist or a pastor-teacher. No, He’s far more involved than that. Instead, as Paul points out, God actually sends our team individuals with each of those talents and skills to work within the body of Christ. God had your team planned way before you ever thought of it! He knew exactly who He was going to send to you to play those various roles. That’s a little humbling in and of itself, isn’t it?
There used to be a Quaker theologian by the name of Elton Trueblood. He died a few years back but, when he was in his mid 80s he spoke at my college graduation. I wish I would have paid attention to him because now I keep running across things he wrote. One of those, though, was that “The Reformation opened the Bible to the common man; a new Reformation will open up ministry to the common man.” When Paul talked about God sending our teams people specifically as evangelists and preachers and teachers and things, he wasn’t talking only about professional clergy … he was talking about you, about me, about all of our team members. He has roles for all of us to play and He’s brought us together specifically to live into those roles.
Another thing we talked about back in our Team Leadership class was about how, on a well functioning team, all members of the team are leaders really. How they all have particular roles to play, are interdependent on each other, and will all be leaders in their own way. God has sent your team the right people – part of your job is to make sure those roles are defined, and everyone is aware of them, so that your team works together harmoniously. Having problems with your team working together? Oftentimes that is because roles have not been clearly defined.
14-16No prolonged infancies among us, please. We'll not tolerate babes in the woods, small children who are an easy mark for impostors. God wants us to grow up, to know the whole truth and tell it in love—like Christ in everything. We take our lead from Christ, who is the source of everything we do. He keeps us in step with each other. His very breath and blood flow through us, nourishing us so that we will grow up healthy in God, robust in love.
People who read my FaceBook page will probably say that I need to pay some serious attention to Paul’s admonition here to grow up but isn’t this great? “We take our lead from Christ, who is the source of everything we do.” Christ is the head of the body – He is who we all are to follow. This is Spiritual Alignment, yes, but I believe that a healthy part of this is appropriate accountability. We’re all on journeys here to follow Christ as the head of the body. We need to respect and appreciate that. And part of that is allowing ourselves to be mentored and held accountable in healthy ways. We have talked a lot about mentoring and discipling in the past. Being willing to really lay yourself humble to another and asking them to hold you accountable is a huge thing. But it is part of living the Spirit-filled life. Members of an effective and healthy team will have the trust and willingness for two-way sharing of their journeys … supporting and encouraging one another … no longer being babes in the woods but being mature Christians knowing the whole truth and telling it in love. Working together to grow up healthy in God, robust in love.
Wow … there’s so much in Ephesians 4 about healthy and high performing teams … I am sure I have barely touched on what all Paul was trying to convey but let’s summarize and look at the attributes of a high performance team that we have talked about.
1) Urgency and Purposefulness – A clearly defined problem. What captures and holds your team’s passion?
a. Able to hold a team together
2) Humility and Discipline – Pursuing the “big” picture instead of one’s own interests.
3) Alignment – Spiritual, Philosophical, Organizational and Methodological
a. Prayer Cell, Trust, Open Discussion
4) Clearly Defined Roles and Interdependency
a. Everyone is a leader
5) Healthy and Appropriate Accountability
a. Mentoring and Discipling
b. Personal Spiritual Journey Plan
c. Following Christ as the head of the Body
Thursday, February 19, 2009
THE WEDGINATOR
A new superhero has arrived on the scene in Salt Lake City -- the Wedginator.
Click here to learn more.
Click here to learn more.
Monday, February 16, 2009
YOU, TOO, CAN HAVE FULLER EYELASHES
For about $4 per day. Click here.
FIND OUR JOY IN GIVING GOD GLORY
"Justify my soul, O God, but also from Your fountains fill my will with fire. Shine in my mind, although perhaps this means "be darkness to my experience," but occupy my heart with Your tremendous Life. Let my eyes see nothing in the world but Your glory, and let my hands touch nothing that is not for Your service. Let my tongue taste no bread that does not strengthen me to praise Your great mercy. I will hear Your voice, and I will hear all the harmonies you have created singing your hymns. Sheep's wool and cotton from the field shall warm me enough that I may live in Your service; I will give the rest to the poor. Let me use all things for one sole reason: to find my joy in giving You glory."
-- Thomas Merton, New Seeds of Contemplation, 1961
-- Thomas Merton, New Seeds of Contemplation, 1961
Friday, February 06, 2009
OUR SILENCE WILL BE DEVASTATING
Sorry I have been so silent lately. You may get an earfull today to try to make up for it. I regret my recent silence; now is not the time to be silent.
This economy thing we're in is way more serious than the now-in-development economic stimulus package gives it credit for being. This package, if not changed drastically (and, believe me, it won't be) is going to go down in history as one of the worst things to ever happen to our country.
President Obama is, during one of our toughest times ever, using fear to entirely mortgage or perhaps even give up on, our future in order to push his agenda with massive spending that is not going to have the desired positive economic impact.
The proposed bills from the Senate and House, by all expert analysis and accounts, have very little spending that is really geared toward fast economic stimulus -- something like less than 15% of the 800+ billion.
Do they not realize what kind of money $800 billion is? Do they not realize where much of that will have to come from -- foreign borrowing with massive tax hikes in the future in attempt to repay it? Oh yeah, wait a minute, they probably do understand all of that.
There are also three key things that truly do not seem to even be on their radar screen. They are:
1) Main Street is going to be devastated by this economy. Small and medium sized businesses all over are doing their best to hang in there but huge numbers of them are going to fall in coming months. While large businesses can attempt to survive by shifting numbers and laying people off, smaller businesses do not so much have that as an option. These businesses are just going to close. Look for shuttered businesses to be appearing soon in huge numbers in neighborhoods near you.
2) A huge banking crisis, perhaps even bigger than the mortgage crisis and certainly impacting some of the banks which have been pretty stable of late, will ensue as business loans and lines of credit go bad. And also as mortgages on the homes of Main Street business owners and their workers go bad. I do not know the numbers but this could very well eclipse what we have seen thus far in the banking crisis.
3) We talk about the current rapidly growing unemployment numbers but we also cannot ignore the fact that businesses simply are not and can not hire people right now. We will have a huge number of high school and college graduates hitting the streets in a few months, unable to find work. College loans will go unpaid and social infrastructure will be further stressed. We ain't seen nothin' yet.
Folks, I know this post is ugly. I know I sound pessimistic. I am telling you, though -- this is serious. We cannot support this economic stimulus package and, if you're being silent about it and not squawking to your congresspeople and everyone you run into, you are by your silence supporting something that, mark my words, will be devastating to our country.
$800 billion is a huge amount of money. The piper will have to be paid. We must not go down this road unless we have assurance that every penny will go for rapid economic stimulus.
And, even at that, it is questionable how effective it would be. Read this article on Japan.
This is going to be devastating, folks. Now is not the time to be silent.
This economy thing we're in is way more serious than the now-in-development economic stimulus package gives it credit for being. This package, if not changed drastically (and, believe me, it won't be) is going to go down in history as one of the worst things to ever happen to our country.
President Obama is, during one of our toughest times ever, using fear to entirely mortgage or perhaps even give up on, our future in order to push his agenda with massive spending that is not going to have the desired positive economic impact.
The proposed bills from the Senate and House, by all expert analysis and accounts, have very little spending that is really geared toward fast economic stimulus -- something like less than 15% of the 800+ billion.
Do they not realize what kind of money $800 billion is? Do they not realize where much of that will have to come from -- foreign borrowing with massive tax hikes in the future in attempt to repay it? Oh yeah, wait a minute, they probably do understand all of that.
There are also three key things that truly do not seem to even be on their radar screen. They are:
1) Main Street is going to be devastated by this economy. Small and medium sized businesses all over are doing their best to hang in there but huge numbers of them are going to fall in coming months. While large businesses can attempt to survive by shifting numbers and laying people off, smaller businesses do not so much have that as an option. These businesses are just going to close. Look for shuttered businesses to be appearing soon in huge numbers in neighborhoods near you.
2) A huge banking crisis, perhaps even bigger than the mortgage crisis and certainly impacting some of the banks which have been pretty stable of late, will ensue as business loans and lines of credit go bad. And also as mortgages on the homes of Main Street business owners and their workers go bad. I do not know the numbers but this could very well eclipse what we have seen thus far in the banking crisis.
3) We talk about the current rapidly growing unemployment numbers but we also cannot ignore the fact that businesses simply are not and can not hire people right now. We will have a huge number of high school and college graduates hitting the streets in a few months, unable to find work. College loans will go unpaid and social infrastructure will be further stressed. We ain't seen nothin' yet.
Folks, I know this post is ugly. I know I sound pessimistic. I am telling you, though -- this is serious. We cannot support this economic stimulus package and, if you're being silent about it and not squawking to your congresspeople and everyone you run into, you are by your silence supporting something that, mark my words, will be devastating to our country.
$800 billion is a huge amount of money. The piper will have to be paid. We must not go down this road unless we have assurance that every penny will go for rapid economic stimulus.
And, even at that, it is questionable how effective it would be. Read this article on Japan.
This is going to be devastating, folks. Now is not the time to be silent.